词条 | Mountain Corps Norway | ||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
| unit_name =Mountain Corps Norway | native_name =Generalkommando Gebirgskorps Norwegen | image = | alt = | caption = | dates =1 July 1940 – 10 November 1942 | country ={{flag|Nazi Germany}} | countries = | allegiance = | branch = | type = | role = | size = | command_structure = | garrison = | garrison_label = | nickname = | patron = | motto = | colors = | colors_label = | march = | mascot = | anniversaries = | equipment = | equipment_label = | battles = | disbanded =10 November 1942 | commander1 = | commander1_label = | commander2 = | commander2_label = | commander3 = | commander3_label = | commander4 = | commander4_label = | commander5 = | commander5_label = | commander6 = | commander6_label = | commander7 = | commander7_label = | commander8 = | commander8_label = | commander9 = | commander9_label = | notable_commanders =Eduard Dietl | identification_symbol = | identification_symbol_label = | identification_symbol_2 = | identification_symbol_2_label = | identification_symbol_3 = | identification_symbol_3_label = | identification_symbol_4 = | identification_symbol_4_label = | identification_symbol_5 = | identification_symbol_5_label = }}{{refimprove|date=October 2012}} Mountain Corps Norway ({{lang-de|Gebirgskorps Norwegen}}) was a German army unit during World War II. It saw action in Norway and Finland. The corps was formed in July 1940 and was later transferred to Northern Norway as part of AOK Norwegen. Its first action was taking part in Operation Renntier, the occupation of Finnish Petsamo. In June 1941 the corps attacked from Petsamo to Murmansk in an operation codenamed Platinfuchs. The attack failed and the corps never reached its goal. In April and May 1942 the Corps faced one of its toughest challenges. During a period of three weeks, the 14th Soviet Army attacked, trying to defeat the Corps. But there was another enemy - on May 4, 1942, a devastating, 90-hour-long polar storm took its toll on the soldiers.[1] In November 1942 the corps was renamed the XIX. Gebirgs-Armeekorps or XIX Mountain Corps. In 1944 the corps finally had to retreat back to Norway, where it surrendered in May 1945. From November 1944 onwards the corps was also sometimes known as Armeeabteilung Narvik. Commanders
Area of operations
Organisation
Strength based on supply documentsOn April 30, 1942, the supply numbers for the Mountain Corps Norway showed the following numbers: 73,978 men and 8,913 horses [2] Of the men:
References1. ^Book(German language) 'Winterschlacht im Mai' - Karl Ruef {{ISBN|3-7020-0472-6}} 2. ^Book(German language) 'Winterschlacht im Mai' - Karl Ruef {{ISBN|3-7020-0472-6}} Bibliography
|last=Tessin |first=Georg |title=Die Landstreitkräfte: Namensverbände / Die Luftstreitkräfte (Fliegende Verbände) / Flakeinsatz im Reich 1943–1945 |trans-title=Ground forces: Named units and formations / Air forces (Flying units and formations) / Anti–aircraft service in the Reich 1943–1945 |work= Verbände und Truppen der deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen–SS im Zweiten Weltkrieg 1939–1945 |volume=14 |publisher=Biblio |location=Osnabrück |year=1980 |isbn=3-7648-1111-0 |language=German }}{{German Army Corps of the Wehrmacht}}{{Subject bar | portal1=Military of Germany | portal2=World War II }}{{Germany-WWII-stub}} 4 : German units in the Arctic|Mountain corps of Germany in World War II|Military units and formations established in 1940|Military units and formations disestablished in 1942 |
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